Dependent
Arising
For
a week, immediately after the enlightenment, the Buddha sat
at the foot of the Bodhi Tree, experiencing the supreme bliss
of emancipation. At the end of the seven days he emerged from
that concentration (samâdhi) and in the first watch
of the night thought over the dependent arising (paticca-samuppâda)
as to how things arise (anuloma) thus:
"When
this is, that comes to be; with the arising of this, that arises;
namely: dependent on ignorance, volitional or kamma formations;
dependent on volitional formations, (rebirth or rebecoming)
consciousness; dependent on consciousness, mentality-materiality
(mental and physical combination); dependent on mentality-materiality,
the sixfold base (the five physical sense organs with consciousness
as the sixth); dependent on the sixfold base, contact; dependent
on contact, feeling; dependent on feeling, craving; dependent
on craving, clinging; dependent on clinging, the process of
becoming; dependent on the process of becoming, there comes
to be birth; dependent on birth arise ageing and death, sorrow,
lamentation, pain, grief, and despair. Thus does this whole
mass of suffering arise."
In
the second watch of the night, the Buddha thought over the dependent
arising as to how things cease (patiloma) thus: "When
this is not, that does not come to be; with the cessation of
this, that ceases; namely: with the utter cessation of ignorance,
the cessation of volitional formations; with the cessation of
formations, the cessation of consciousness....(and so on). Thus
does this whole mass of suffering cease."
In
the third watch of the night, the Buddha thought over the dependent
arising both as to how things arise and cease thus:
"When
this is, that comes to be; with the arising of this, that arises;
when this is not, that does not come to be; with the cessation
of this, that ceases; namely: dependent on ignorance, volitional
formations....(and so on). Thus does this whole mass of suffering
arise. With the utter cessation of ignorance, the cessation
of volitional formations....(and so on). Thus does this whole
mass of suffering cease."n17
The
Buddha now spent six more weeks in lonely retreat at six different
spots in the vicinity of the Bodhi Tree. At the end of this
period two merchants, Tapassu and Bhallika, who were passing
that way, offered rice cake and honey to the Master, and said:
"We go for refuge to the Buddha and to the Dhamma.n18
Let the Blessed One receive us as his followers."n19
They became his first lay followers (upâsakas).